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Associated Press
Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist hugs his daughter Slone, 6, outside police headquarters in Tacoma, Wash., on Thursday as they visit a growing memorial for an officer killed during a domestic violence call.

Thursday, December 01, 2016 10:02 pm

Tacoma officer's death begins 11-hour standoff

Associated Press

SEATTLE – A Washington state police officer responding to a domestic violence call was fatally shot and his fellow officers were still "taking fire" as they removed him from a home, beginning an 11-hour standoff during which authorities say the gunman used two young children as human shields.

The fallen officer, Reginald "Jake" Gutierrez, had served with the department since 1999 and was highly respected and experienced, Tacoma Police Chief Donald Ramsdell told reporters Thursday.

Dozens of officers had surrounded the home in Tacoma on Wednesday night, urging nearby residents of the working class neighborhood of single-family homes to shelter in place.

Early Thursday, authorities say a deputy got "a clear shot" and killed the suspect as officers rescued an 8-year-old girl and a 6-year-old boy.

Pierce County sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said the gunman had refused to surrender during negotiations. His name was not released.

"We were able to get the suspect cornered and trapped, even though he had two kids," Troyer said. "We had a SWAT member who had a clear shot. We fired one round, which struck him."

Ramsdell said the incident began Wednesday afternoon when animal control officers working near the house were approached by a woman who said her husband had locked her out and taken her phone. The officers called police.

Gutierrez and his female partner went into the home, and Gutierrez was shot as he reached the top of the stairs to speak with the suspect, Ramsdell said.

The female officer shot back and ran from the house, taking the wife to safety.

Tacoma police spokeswoman Loretta Cool described the hectic scene that led to the standoff.

"We had an officer down and shots still firing at the time," Cool said. Police managed to get the officer out, "but they were still taking fire," she said.

Officers didn’t immediately know children were in the house and became aware of their presence during the standoff, she said.

"When they were able to rescue the boy, there was an opening to rescue the girl," Cool said. "That provoked the shot to take the suspect out."

Authorities discovered multiple weapons inside the house but did not describe them in detail. Few details were released about the treatment of the children by the suspect.

Ramsdell said the suspect did not have a "serious background in regards to criminal history" but there may have been issues with mental illness.

Kristi Croskey, who rented the house to the suspect and his wife, was inside the home at the time and barricaded herself in the bathroom before she was able to escape, KOMO-TV reported.

She said police came to the residence because the suspect was fighting with his wife and refused to let her back inside.

"They said they just wanted to talk to him and then gunfire started; they didn’t start it," Croskey told the station.